In this video, angry Haitians chant to protest the normalizing of corruption with the legally incriminated puppet President Jovenel Moise. They reject his presence in their community. Jovenel Moise is in New York for the United Nations gathering of world leaders. The crowd chants: “bare volè“- “stop the thieves” and “Pa vle, pa vle, pa vle ti nèg dwòg” – “We don’t want this drug dealer!”

“We can’t take this anymore!” they sing, demanding respect and dignity for Haiti.

The outraged Haitian protestors are assembled to show the United States and the legal bandits of the international community and wealthy oligarchs in Haiti how the Diaspora rejects these drug dealers and money launderers, put into power, in Haiti, through the 2015-2016 Obama-Clinton-UN/OAS/CORE GROUP foreign-imposed elections. Jovenel Moise in their community is an insult and affront, they say.

Bannann yo gate nan men Jovnèl

Jovenel Moise is a consultant-created candidate who lied about his banana business for campaign purposes in a fraud committed against the voters. A money launderer makes money off the kidnapping, human trafficking, all sort of contraband activities, and drug dealings. Jovenel Moise was already part of the criminality in Haiti before he started to campaign, one protester says.

Haitians, duly disturbed by the lies – the vote fraud, the U.N-US military occupation, the deported felons who bought their seats in the 2015/2016 Parliament, the $2 billion Petro Caraibe swindle included for Main Street to pay in the criminal budget – gathered by the hundreds yesterday at Pastor Nicolas’ church in Brooklyn, taking the police and New York authorities by surprise, to reject the new 10,000 gourdes ($158.25) diaspora tax the illegitimate government and mostly narco-trafficking parliament assessed on all Haitians. They also demanded accountability for the $1.50 tax per remittance and the extra .05cent surcharge per each five minutes of a phone call to Haiti that’s been assessed against the Diaspora since 2011 without improvements in school education in Haiti.

The protestors make the point that the government denied an 800 gourdes ($12) per day minimum wage increase. Haiti factory workers will only make a mere $5.54 per day minimum wage. Yet, it wants each Haitian to pay a $159.25 yearly tax and other taxes including 2500 gourdes for a voting card. They want to know how are the Haitians in Haiti earning a slave wage, and Haitians in Haiti without jobs and Haitians deported to Haiti, including the TPS returnees without jobs, are supposed to pay, for some worker categories, half the amount of the yearly minimum wage, in taxes.